Chapter 12

advertisement

The Design of the
Tax System
12
What’s in this chapter?
• How does the US government raise money and
what does it do with it?
• Is our tax system efficient? That is, does it raise
money for the government in a way that
minimizes ‘collateral damage’?
• Is our tax system fair?
“In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.”
. . . Benjamin Franklin
100
80
60
40
20
0
1789
Taxes paid in Ben
Franklin’s time
accounted for 5
percent of the
average
American’s
income.
“In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.”
. . . Benjamin Franklin
100
80
Today, taxes
account for up
to a third of
the average
American’s
income.
60
40
20
0
1789
Today
Figure 1 Government Revenue as
a Percentage of GDP
Percent of
Revenue as
GDP
35
Total government
30
25
State and local
20
15
Federal
10
5
0
1902
1913
1922 1927 1932 1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
Table 1: Central Government Tax
Revenue as a Percentage of GDP
Source: World Development Report 1998/99
Table 2 Receipts of the Federal
Government: 2004
Source: Economic Report of the President, 2005, Table B-81.
• Social Insurance Taxes are taxes on wages that are earmarked
to pay for Social Security and Medicare.
Receipts of the Federal Government
2004
Individual Income
Tax, 43%
Social Insurance
Tax, 39%
Corporate Tax,
10%
Other, 8%
Table 3 Federal Income Tax Rates:
2004
Federal Government Spending
• Government spending includes:
• Transfer payments and
• Spending on public goods and services.
• Transfer payments are government payments not made in
exchange for a good or a service.
• Transfer payments are the largest of the government’s
expenditures.
Table 4 Spending of the Federal
Government: 2004
Source: Economic Report of the President, 2005, Table B-81.
Federal Government Spending:
2004
Net Interest, 7%
Other, 15%
Social Security, 22%
Defense, 20%
Medicare, 12%
Health, 10%
Income Security, 15%
The Demographic and Fiscal
Challenge
The Demographic and Fiscal
Challenge
State and Local Governments
• State and local governments collect about 40
percent of taxes paid.
Table 5 Receipts of State and Local
Governments: 2002
Source: Economic Report of the President, 2005, Table B-86.
Table 6 Spending of State and
Local Governments: 2002
Source: Economic Report of the President, 2005, Table B-86.
TAXES AND EFFICIENCY
• Policymakers have two objectives in designing
a tax system:
•
•
Efficiency
Equity (or, fairness)
TAXES AND EFFICIENCY
• One tax system is more efficient than another if
it raises the same amount of revenue at a
smaller cost to taxpayers.
TAXES AND EFFICIENCY
• The Cost of Taxes to Taxpayers consist of:
• The tax payment itself
• Deadweight losses
• Administrative burdens
Deadweight Losses
• Because taxes distort incentives, they entail
deadweight losses. (See chapter 8.)
• The deadweight loss of a tax is the reduction of
the economic well-being caused by the tax
minus the revenue raised by the government.
Deadweight Loss of Taxes
Cost
$5
Willingness to Pay
Joe
Jane
$8
$6
No Tax Tax = $2
Price = cost + tax
$5
$5 + $2 = $7
Joe’s consumer surplus
3
1
Jane’s consumer surplus
1
0 (does not buy)
Total consumer surplus 4
1
Producer surplus
0
0
Tax revenue
0
2
Total surplus
4
3
Deadweight loss of tax
0
1
• Jane stops buying
this commodity to
avoid having to pay
the tax.
• As a result she loses
her consumer
surplus.
• This is also the
deadweight loss of
the tax.
• Note that the
deadweight loss is
suffered by those
who are not paying
the tax!
Deadweight Loss of Taxes
• When a tax changes someone’s behavior, it
always has a deadweight loss.
• An efficient tax does not affect anybody’s
behavior and, therefore, has no deadweight
losses
• Example: lump-sum taxes
Should income or consumption be
taxed?
• Income tax reduces take-home interest income
(as well as other income) and thereby changes
our saving behavior
• Consumption tax does not have this effect on
saving behavior
• This is why the US tax laws provide many ways
of protecting interest income from taxes
Lump-Sum Taxes
• A lump-sum tax is a tax that cannot be avoided
by changing one’s behavior.
• Example: a $10 tax on everyone
• Example: a $10 tax on those born on a Tuesday
• These taxes cannot be avoided and do not
induce any behavior change
• These taxes have no deadweight losses and are
efficient ways of raising revenue for the
government
• Unfortunately, they are not fair.
Administrative Burdens
• Complying with tax laws creates additional
deadweight losses.
• Taxpayers lose additional time and money
documenting, computing, and avoiding taxes over
and above the actual taxes they pay.
• The administrative burden of any tax system is part
of the inefficiency it creates.
Administrative Burdens
• Administrative burdens can be reduced by
making our tax laws simpler.
• Unfortunately, greater simplicity may lead to
less fairness.
• Example: asking for the taxpayer’s marital
status, number of dependents, health
expenditures, etc. may be necessary to figure
out a fair tax for the taxpayer, but this would
increase the administrative burden.
TAXES AND EQUITY
• How should the burden of taxes be divided
among the population?
• How do we evaluate whether a tax system is
fair?
TAXES AND EQUITY
• Principles of Taxation
• Benefits principle
• Ability-to-pay principle
Benefits Principle
• The benefits principle is the idea that people
should pay taxes based on the benefits they
receive from government services.
• Examples:
• Tax revenues from the gasoline tax are used to
finance our highway system. As a result, people
who drive the most also pay the most toward
maintaining roads.
• Rich people benefit more from police protection
and should, therefore, pay more in taxes
Ability-to-Pay Principle
• The ability-to-pay principle is the idea that
taxes should be levied on a person according to
how well that person can shoulder the burden.
• The ability-to-pay principle leads to two
corollary notions of equity.
• Vertical equity
• Horizontal equity
Ability-to-Pay Principle
• Vertical equity is the idea that taxpayers with a
greater ability to pay taxes should pay larger
amounts.
• For example, people with higher incomes should
pay more than people with lower incomes.
Ability-to-Pay Principle
• Horizontal Equity
• Horizontal equity is the idea that taxpayers with
similar abilities to pay taxes should pay the same
amounts.
• For example, two families with the same number of
dependents and the same income living in different
parts of the country should pay the same federal
taxes.
Ability-to-Pay Principle
• Vertical Equity and Alternative Tax Systems
• A proportional tax is one for which high-income
and low-income taxpayers pay the same fraction of
income.
• A regressive tax is one for which high-income
taxpayers pay a smaller fraction of their income
than do low-income taxpayers.
• A progressive tax is one for which high-income
taxpayers pay a larger fraction of their income than
do low-income taxpayers.
Table 7: Three Tax Systems
• All three tax systems can have vertical equity
Table 8 The Burden of Federal Taxes
The last two columns show that our
Federal taxes are progressive.
Tax Incidence and Tax Equity
• The difficulty in formulating tax policy is
balancing the often conflicting goals of
efficiency and equity.
• The study of who bears the burden of taxes is
central to evaluating tax equity.
• This study is called tax incidence.
Tax Incidence and Tax Equity
• According to the Flypaper Theory of Tax
Incidence, the burden of a tax, like a fly on
flypaper, sticks wherever it first lands.
• This theory is rarely valid
• Taxes on corporate income may be passed on to
workers (through lower wages) and consumers
(through higher prices)
• As a result, the data in Table 8 may not give an
accurate account of how the tax burden is actually
shared.
The Flat Tax
• Tax = tax rate × (Income - Exemption)
• Example: Tax = 0.19 × (Income - $10,000)
• Deductions eliminated. This keeps the tax rate
low
• Low administrative costs
• Can be made as progressive as necessary by
increasing the exemption and the tax rate.
Summary
• The U.S. government raises revenue using
various taxes.
• Income taxes and payroll taxes raise the most
revenue for the federal government.
• Sales taxes and property taxes raise the most
revenue for the state and local governments.
Summary
• Equity and efficiency are the two most
important goals of the tax system.
• The efficiency of a tax system refers to the
costs it imposes on the taxpayers.
• The equity of a tax system concerns whether
the tax burden is distributed fairly among the
population.
Summary
• According to the benefits principle, it is fair for
people to pay taxes based on the benefits they
receive from the government.
• According to the ability-to-pay principle, it is
fair for people to pay taxes on their capability to
handle the financial burden.
Summary
• The distribution of tax burdens is not the same
as the distribution of tax bills.
• Much of the debate over tax policy arises
because people give different weights to the
two goals of efficiency and equity.